Shockheaded Peter, the dark Off-Broadway entertainment about children in peril — one of the best-reviewed shows of the 2004-05 season in New York — will close May 29.

Julian Bleach in Shockheaded PeterPhoto by Joan Marcus

A rave from the New York Times followed by feature stories in its arts section couldn't save poor Peter from its premature demise.

Previews began Feb. 11 toward a Feb. 22 opening, featuring a British cast. In recent weeks, an American cast took over the roles, but the change was not thought to be the reason for a sales slump — the show is viewed as an ensemble experience, boasting subject matter that's considered a hard sell in any market.

In London, they liked it so much it won the 2002 Olivier Award. The show played engagements in the U.K., though not a conventional long run in commercial terms.

The show's world is a sort of Victorian haunted house where misbehaving children meet their gory and (perhaps) deserved ends.

Created by Julian Bleach, Anthony Cairns, Julian Crouch, Graeme Gilmour, Tamzin Griffin, Jo Pocock, Phelim McDermott, Michael Morris, The Tiger Lillies (Martyn Jacques, Adrian Huge, Adrian Stout), Shockheaded Peter features 11 original songs written and performed by The Tiger Lillies, a trio from London's underground. Those tunes, played on drums, bass and accordion, and sung in an eerie falsetto, tell of such young ruffians as Johnny Head-in-air, who never looks where he's going; Conrad, who won't leave off sucking his thumbs; Harriet, a fiend for playing with matches; and Augustus, who forever cries "take that nasty soup away!" Invariably, the morality tales end with the terse lyric "He's dead," or "He died." The whole is overseen by a ghoulishly attired narrator, who proclaims himself "the greatest actor that ever existed," and proceeds to take on roles include a large cat, the slovenly title baby, and Snip Snip, the flame-headed demon who cuts off the thumbs of naughty Conrad.

Shockheaded Peter is a musical staging of the 19th-century children's book "Struwwelpeter" (slovenly Peter), a volume of cautionary children's tales by Heinrich Hoffmann. The lyrics were adapted from Hoffmann.

The intermissionless production, which was briefly seen at New York's Victory Theatre in 1999, returned to Off-Broadway with its original cast. Julian Crouch and Phelim McDermott direct the production.